SC 388 Culture Through Film Spring 2010 Wednesday 3:00 to 6:00PM O’Neil 211 Professor: Jim Hamm Office: McGuinn 426D Office hours: Monday and Wednesday by appointment email: hammj@bc.edu About the course This course is about the construction of realities. It explores many of the social issues of our times: truth and reality, the anthropological gaze, identity, justice, race, gender, sexual orientation, indigenous rights, marriage, Israeli/Palestinian relations, madness, deconstruction, retardation and overdetermination. Why do we think the way we do? How do people’s concepts of reality influence the ways they behave? Portions of this course may be disturbing or sad. Sometimes, you will see yourselves and may not like what you see. At times you may find the course too political. You may find that you leave the course less sure about concepts that you have not previously questioned. All of the films have been chosen to be interesting as well as provocative. Wherever possible, feature films are used. The readings have been carefully chosen to complement the films. Since the course meets once a week to view and discuss the films, it is critical that you read the assigned material before class. Each week, we will identify what is anthropologically interesting about the films. Requirements You must attend class each week. The films are on reserve in the media center in the library. Since the course is more than watching a film, when you miss class, you miss the discussion that develops a sometimes different understanding of the topic. Be careful. You are required to prepare a two page, double-spaced paper each week on an assigned topic. The paper is due in class. If your paper is late, you will lose twenty percentage points. Late papers may be turned into my mailbox in McGuinn 426. For each paper, you have a rewrite option if you handed the first paper in on time and if you attended the relevant class. If you rewrite, you will receive the higher grade. Grading The course grade is composed of three parts of equal weight (33.3 per cent) - the papers, the midterm and the final. 1 Since the papers account for one-third of the grade, they should be taken seriously. The reason the papers are so important is that they are a way for you to find out what you understand about the topics. It is in writing that we often find logical inconsistencies in our thinking. There are eleven papers. The assignment sheets are included in the reader. The mid-term and the final will each be based on the material for that half of the course. Attendance Attendance is required. There is a bonus for attendance. If you miss one class, your lowest paper grade will be dropped. If you miss no classes, your lowest two paper grades will be dropped. This is a substantial bonus: don’t miss it. There are no excuses for missing a class. This is a bonus, not a penalty. If you have more than three unexcused absences, you will receive an F. No senior spring. Attendance will be taken after the break. You do not get credit for attendance if you do not stay for the discussion. Study guides There is a study guide for each week of the course included in the reader. The weekly study guide is part of the assigned reading. The paper assignment is included in the study guide. Readings The readings have been gathered into a course pack that can be purchased from the book store. A copy is on reserve in the library. Read the assignment each week before the film. The readings will be part of the discussion. Lesson Plan Week 1 (1-20-10) Truth and Reality What is truth? How does the position of the observer affect the perception of reality? Film: Rashomon (1959: 87 minutes) PL801.K8 R382 Four people tell their versions of what they witnessed. There are significant similarities and differences. What happened? How do the participants and the observers’ agendas affect the production of truth? Reader: Heider 73-81 Paper #1 - Rashomon - due 1-27-10 2 Week 2 (1-27-10) Discourse We are able to think within the discourses of our times. What happens when new ideas are introduced form outside? Film: Pleasantville PN1997.P5785 (1999: 124 min) Reader: Mills 6-22 Paper #2 - Discourse - due 2-3-10 Week 3 (2-3-10) Justice How do different societies resolve conflicts? These films illustrate different ways conflict is resolved. Why does justice take different forms? Film: Meat Fight (1974: 14 minutes) DT1058.K86 M43 The Cows of Dolo Paye (1970: 32 minutes) GN655.L5 D65 Stranger with a Camera (2000: 58 minutes) HN79.K4 S77 Reader: Marcus 137-141, Metcalf 83-87 Paper #3 - Justice - due 2-10-10 Week 4 (2-10-10) Race and the Cultural Construction of Difference If ideas of race change over time, what does that say about concepts of race? Film: Race: The Power of Illusion: the Differences Between Us (2002: 60 minutes) HT1521.R33 Skin Deep (1996: 53 minutes) LA229.S65 Reader: McIntosh 163-168, Divakaruni 35-56 Paper #4 – Race due 2-17-10 3 Week 5 (2-17-10) Sexual Orientation What does it mean to be different with regard to sexual orientation? Where does each of us fit into the gendered scheme of things? Why are homosexuals devalued? Film: Two Spirit People (1995: 28 minutes) (my DVD) The Times of Harvey Milk (1984: 87 minutes) HQ76.8.U5 T56 Two Spirit People provides a way for Native American homosexuals to see themselves as a third gender who have been historically special and significant to their people. The Times of Harvey Milk explores an openly gay man’s rise to prominence in San Francisco. Harvey is shown to represent all the people in his district. Reader: Lang 202-217 Paper #5 - Sexual Orientation – due 2-24-10 Week 6 (2-24-10) Gender What does gender mean? How do concepts of gender change over time? One True Thing provides a striking look at the clash produced by different concepts of gender. Film: One True Thing (1999: 128 minutes) PS3567.U336 O54 When Ellen returns home to run her parents household and care for her mother who has been diagnosed with terminal cancer, she is anything but a happy camper. Reader: Hochschild 11-32 Paper #6 – Gender – due 3-17-10 Week 7 (3-17-10) What Does It Mean To Be A Man? What does it mean to be a man? How do men reach beyond the cultural constructions that define their roles in the world? Film: Kinky Boots (2005: 107 min) PN1995.9.C55 K56 Kinky Boots raises questions about male gender roles and sexuality. Watch what happens to Dan and Charlie as they come full face with who they are. Reader: Kimmel 116-120 Midterm Exam – take home – due 3-24-10 (no paper due) 4 Week 8 (3-24-10) Indigenous Social Resistance The Aborigines Act was in place in Australia from 1900 to 1970. How can we understand legal inhumane treatment of a segment of a population as late as 1970? Film: Rabbit Proof Fence (2002: 94 minutes) PN1993.5.A8 R33 Three young Australian half-cast girls are taken from their families and put into Moore River Camp to be educated to be useful to white society. Reader: Manne 1-5, Johnston 1-2 Paper #7 – Indigenous Rights – due 3-31-10 Week 9 (3-31-10) Marriage What is marriage? What motivates people to marry? What are the implications for concepts of the family? How do concepts of marriage reflect and influence the way a society operates? Film: Monsoon Wedding (2002: 115 minutes) PN1993.5.I8.M66 This film takes us into the realm of arranged marriage in India. We see contradictions between tradition and modernity and loyalties based on blood and marriage relationships. What does it mean to be a good Indian? Reader: Nanda 196-204, Lahira 1-21 Paper #8 – Marriage – due 4-7-10 Week 10 (4-7-10) Orientalism: A View from the Other Side How do we construct the other? Why do we do this? Edward Said, in Orientalism (1978), wrote that western cultural institutions are responsible for the creation of the Other, whose differences from us can then be used to justify whatever behavior toward them we choose. Peace of Mind looks at the “Palestine question” from the perspectives of Israeli and Palestinian teenagers who have a shared experience. Film: Edward Said on Orientalism (1999: 31 minutes) my DVD Peace of Mind: Coexistence Through the Eyes of Palestinian and Israeli Youth (1999: 57 minutes) JZ5579.P433 Reader: Said 1-9, Barsamin 52-57, Reinhart 1-7, Meital 1-10 Paper #9 – Orientalism – due 4-14-10 5 Week 11 (4-14-10) Deconstructing the Hegemonic Discourse What makes soldiers kill each other? What happens if a soldier sees his enemy as a man like himself, perhaps even sharing similar belief systems? Film: Merry Christmas (2005: 116 min) PN1993.5.F7 J69 Reader: Currie 48-52 Paper #10 – Deconstruction – due 4-21-10 Week 12 (4-21-10) Mental Retardation What are the roles and rights of both mentally retarded people and the state? How are they decided? Film: I Am Sam (2002: 134 minutes) HV1553.I3 Reader: Seagull 493-500, Wedding 137-144 Paper #11 - Retardation - due 4-28-10 Week 13 (4-28-10) Overdetermination Why do we seek to explain events in terms of cause and effect relationships? If, instead, we understand that an event or situation has too many determinations to be able to single out any one or several of them as a principal cause(s) and that there are likely more determinations that we have not recognized, then we have arrived at a point of overdetermination. Film: The Butterfly Effect (2004: 120 minutes) PN1977.2.B88 In this film, Evan has the ability to choose a point in the past and re-enact an event to bring about a different outcome for himself and the other people involved. He can choose “door B.” As the film shows, when you change something, there are unforeseen consequences. Reader: Gleich 11-31, web – Chaos Theory 1-6, web - overdetermination 1-5, Hawkes 128 Final Exam due in my mailbox in McGuinn 426 on Friday, May 14, 2010 6